Can Proprioceptive Knee Brace Improve Functional Outcome Following Total Knee Arthroplasty?

Status: Recruiting
Location: See location...
Intervention Type: Device
Study Type: Interventional
Study Phase: Not Applicable
SUMMARY

Osteoarthritis is among the most prevalent form of degenerative joint disease in arthritis. The World Health Organisation identified osteoarthritis as one of the top ten most disabling cause of disease in developed countries, and the single most common cause of disability for elderly persons. In fact, worldwide statistics for men and women over 60 years of age with signs of symptomatic osteoarthritis are estimated to be at 9.6% and 18.0% respectively. In Hong Kong, the latest census revealed that 514,000 people suffer from degenerative arthritis, representing 0.7% of the population. Although these values are much lower than the international figures reported by the WHO, it is inevitable that the prevalence of osteoarthritis will continue to rise with an increasing trend of obesity and an aging population in Hong Kong. Similar to any other chronic disease with wide prevalence, the impact of osteoarthritis translates to a substantial socioeconomic burden on a societal level. Total knee arthroplasty has become the gold standard to manage the pain and disability associated with end-stage arthritis who have exhausted all conservative measures. Although contemporary advances in prosthesis design, surgical techniques, postoperative rehabilitation regimes have hasten patient's recovery, the restoration of proprioception and neuromuscular control is often prolonged despite solid rehabilitation regimes. Knee bracing is one of the non-pharmacological modalities designed to evenly distribute load and provide proprioceptive feedbacks for those with knee injuries or knee pain. There are four categories of knee braces for the purpose of prophylactic, functional, rehabilitative and unloader/off-load. This study will mainly be focusing on the effects of the unloader/off-loader brace. Previous studies have demonstrated the effects on alteration of kinematic variables, including range of movement (p=0.002), speed of walking (p\<0.001) and knee adduction moment (p=0.001) for knee injuries and osteoarthritis as a part of the conservative management protocol. However, there have few studies that investigated whether proprioceptive knee bracing has any role in functional recovery post total knee arthroplasty.

Eligibility
Participation Requirements
Sex: All
Minimum Age: 18
Healthy Volunteers: f
View:

• Adult (age over 18 years old) underwent Total Knee Arthroplasty within 2 to 4 weeks;

• Adult who is able to provide written consent and compliance with treatment and assessment regime

Locations
Other Locations
Hong Kong Special Administrative Region
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
RECRUITING
Hong Kong
Contact Information
Primary
Michael Tim-Yun Ong
michael.ong@cuhk.edu.hk
26364171
Time Frame
Start Date: 2022-09-26
Estimated Completion Date: 2024-09-30
Participants
Target number of participants: 30
Treatments
Experimental: Intervention group
Device: Proprioceptive knee brace Subjects will use proprioceptive knee brace for 6 weeks post-op, in addition to basic management such as physiotherapy.
No_intervention: Control group
No device. Subjects will receive basic management such as physiotherapy.
Sponsors
Leads: Chinese University of Hong Kong

This content was sourced from clinicaltrials.gov